2013年1月3日

10 Things We Can Learn From the Recent Move



日期:2013/01/02

1. All stock timing systems suffer from their inability to get back long after selling.

2. It is impossible to overcome the positive drift of 10% a year with timing systems.

3. Investing in an index fund enables one to capture the drift without being forced out by emotional reasons and news.

4. The moves in just two days, e.g from 1384 to 1458 in two days can be very violent and account for the major portion of profits in a year.

5. The big 27 point decline on 12 24 provided a cathartic unleashing of all weak longs from the market.



6. Any flexions or strong longs who were able to take the opposite side of that trade, i.e. by buying at 1384 would have been well situated especially if their customers were forced to liquidate due to margin or they knew of margin liquidations.

7. There were thousands of articles talking about the big market decline that was inevitable if we fell off the fiscal cliff but hardly a one that talked about the market rise that would occur if we didn't fall off it.

8. The stock market vigilantes forced the politicians to agree on a deal, and at the highest levels that was given as a reason for the necessity of agreeing on a deal.

9. The fixed income market moved to near a 1 year low as the stock market moves to a 1 year high

10. The Mississippi bubble wherein the French Government bought in all its outstanding debt before those of bent posture used their back to allow buying of stocks at the peak seems more analogous to the present situation then the scholarly chair's studies of what happened during the depression. What other biggies did I miss.

11. The time to buy stocks is when fear is at the greatest.

12. The best thing for the investor to read is Dimson, Marsh and Staunton's The Triumph of the Optimists and Fisher and Lorie on returns from buying stocks with different holding periods. But don't be put off by the relatively pessimistic conclusions of the former paper as that is de rigeur for the zeitgeist of Europe.

13. The big up moves both absolute and relative in all other stock markets like Japan and Germany well before the US carried ours along by gravitational force and were predictive.

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